The first president of the Banc of California Stadium entertainment division, Adam Friedman, has agreed to step back from his full-time role with the Los Angeles Football Club.

No replacement will be named, confirmed LAFC co-owner and president Tom Penn.

Working in coordination with USC and the Office of Exposition Park Management, BOCSE manages events at the stadium and throughout the South Los Angeles site.

“The BOCSE group will continue to function as they do and we’ll do it within the larger fold of LAFC and our stadium operations,” Penn said.

After serving in the position since May 2018, Friedman, who did not comment for this story, will remain involved as a consultant.

The former House of Blues executive and Nederlander Concerts CEO was tasked with programming the stadium’s event calendar beyond LAFC’s Major League Soccer and U.S. Open Cup matches, which total 20 to 25 dates per year.

During an open workout for boxers Saul “Canelo” Alvarez and Gennady Golovkin at the stadium last August, Friedman said “there was always the expectation that there would be a lot more than simply football” at the $350 million Gensler-designed building, which includes an innovative stage that exists underneath the stands at the north end – where The 3252 supporters reside on LAFC game days.

In December, the stadium grounds hosted a two-day music festival “Rolling Loud,” and upward of 50,000 people attended per day, according to Penn.

The Original Misfits are scheduled to play Banc of California Stadium on June 29. Mumford & Sons will appear on Aug. 3. And Iron Maiden will make use of the facility on Sept. 14.

Penn credited Friedman with “helping us finish the building off; helping us come up with this innovative stage solution concept; helping to establish us in the marketplace; and helping us understand it all.”